Thanks! I brought my Fuji x100v on this trip to keep bulk and weight down due to flying. It's a great camera for keeping on you to document whatever is going on.Fantastic photos to tell the story. What camera were you using?
Thanks for sharing. Really cool to read and visualize everything with these great photos. That Fuji x100v is impressive.....how long have you been shooting with that?Thanks! I brought my Fuji x100v on this trip to keep bulk and weight down due to flying. It's a great camera for keeping on you to document whatever is going on.
I've had the x100v for about a year and a half but I've been pursuing photography as a hobby for about 20 years.Thanks for sharing. Really cool to read and visualize everything with these great photos. That Fuji x100v is impressive.....how long have you been shooting with that?
I've done a few euro mounts of pronghorn already. The trick is once you get the horn sheaths off you need to pack the sheaths with borax or salt to get them dried out, remove the fleshy bits from the horn bones and then use epoxy or something to seal up the inside of the sheaths. I packed them with bondo and then stuck plastic over the bones, mounted the sheaths then let it cure so that I could take the sheaths off of the bone.You might make inquiry with somebody more in the know about antelope skulls. I shot one 20 years ago and the horns came off within a year, and the euro mount was a no go. They are not like deer or elk antlers. There must be a trick to properly preserving them.
I've done a few euro mounts of pronghorn already. The trick is once you get the horn sheaths off you need to pack the sheaths with borax or salt to get them dried out, remove the fleshy bits from the horn bones and then use epoxy or something to seal up the inside of the sheaths. I packed them with bondo and then stuck plastic over the bones, mounted the sheaths then let it cure so that I could take the sheaths off of the bone.